diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'googletest/docs/FAQ.md')
-rw-r--r-- | googletest/docs/FAQ.md | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/googletest/docs/FAQ.md b/googletest/docs/FAQ.md index 76c23727..1a216a1a 100644 --- a/googletest/docs/FAQ.md +++ b/googletest/docs/FAQ.md @@ -102,9 +102,9 @@ Then every user of your machine can write tests without recompiling Google Test. This seemed like a good idea, but it has a -got-cha: every user needs to compile his tests using the _same_ compiler +got-cha: every user needs to compile their tests using the _same_ compiler flags used to compile the installed Google Test libraries; otherwise -he may run into undefined behaviors (i.e. the tests can behave +they may run into undefined behaviors (i.e. the tests can behave strangely and may even crash for no obvious reasons). Why? Because C++ has this thing called the One-Definition Rule: if @@ -494,7 +494,7 @@ EXPECT_PRED1(IsPositive, 5); However, this will work: ``` cpp -EXPECT_PRED1(*static_cast<bool (*)(int)>*(IsPositive), 5); +EXPECT_PRED1(static_cast<bool (*)(int)>(IsPositive), 5); ``` (The stuff inside the angled brackets for the `static_cast` operator is the @@ -512,14 +512,14 @@ bool IsNegative(T x) { you can use it in a predicate assertion like this: ``` cpp -ASSERT_PRED1(IsNegative*<int>*, -5); +ASSERT_PRED1(IsNegative<int>, -5); ``` Things are more interesting if your template has more than one parameters. The following won't compile: ``` cpp -ASSERT_PRED2(*GreaterThan<int, int>*, 5, 0); +ASSERT_PRED2(GreaterThan<int, int>, 5, 0); ``` @@ -528,7 +528,7 @@ which is one more than expected. The workaround is to wrap the predicate function in parentheses: ``` cpp -ASSERT_PRED2(*(GreaterThan<int, int>)*, 5, 0); +ASSERT_PRED2((GreaterThan<int, int>), 5, 0); ``` |